Unless you overdo it and carmelize it, it is a physical change. A typical process is to dissolve a large amount of sugar into hot water (physical change - the sugar is still sugar and the water is still water; they do not react. If the sugar-water is not syrupy enough, you can boil off some of the water (still a physical change).
If you overdo it though, you will begin to caramelize the sugar. If the sugar is sucrose, it breaks down into fructose and sucrose along with a host of other side reactions that condense, isomerize, dehydrate, fragment, polymerize, and otherwise chemically change the original sugar. Caramelization is definitely a chemical change, but it is not necessary to make syrup.
It is a chemical change. Making a new chemical is the very definition of chemical change.
It is a chemical change.
This is a chemical change.
Physical
Dissolving sugar in water is an example of a physical change. Here's why: A chemical change produces new chemical products. In order for sugar in water to be a chemical change, something new would need to result. A chemical reaction would have to occur.
Physical since it's still sugar, for it to be called chemical change is turning it to something new
chemical change
Physical
Physical change
Dissolving sugar in water is a physical change. If you let the water evaporate, the sugar will be left behind. Evaporation is a physical process, not chemical.
Physical.
It is a physical change.
It is a physical change. :D
physical
No. It is a chemical change.
It is a physical change. The sugar is still sugar after it is pulverized.
Physical
It is a chemical change because sugar is decomposed.
Physical change
it s a physical change.
Dissolving sugar in water is a physical change. If you let the water evaporate, the sugar will be left behind. Evaporation is a physical process, not chemical.
Physical.
a chemical reaction
Chemical.